Last reviewed: June 2026
The three main routes compared
| Destination | Licensing exam | English test | Notable for |
|---|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | NMC CBT + OSCE | IELTS or OET | Clear sponsored route; OSCE taken in the UK |
| United States | NCLEX-RN (+ CGFNS/credential eval) | IELTS/TOEFL (varies by board) | High salaries; visa/retrogression timelines vary |
| Gulf / Saudi Arabia | Prometric (e.g. SCFHS/DHA/HAAD) | Often required | Tax-free pay; faster onboarding |
Fees, exam formats, visa rules and English-test minimums change frequently and differ by employer and regulator. Treat this as orientation and confirm specifics on each official body's site before committing money.
United Kingdom (NMC)
The UK route is popular and well-trodden. You register with the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC): pass a computer-based test (CBT) taken online, meet the English requirement (IELTS or OET), have your NMCN qualification verified, then sit a practical OSCE after arriving in the UK — usually with employer sponsorship. Full UK guide →
United States (NCLEX-RN)
To practise in the USA you typically need a credentials evaluation (often via CGFNS), to meet a state board's requirements, pass the NCLEX-RN, and secure a visa. Pay is high, but immigration timelines can vary significantly by year and state. Full NCLEX guide →
Gulf & Saudi Arabia (Prometric)
Gulf states recruit Nigerian nurses heavily. Registration usually runs through a health authority (e.g. SCFHS in Saudi Arabia, DHA/DOH in the UAE) with a Prometric exam and a DataFlow primary-source verification of your credentials. Tax-free salaries and quicker onboarding are the draw.
How to choose
- Want the clearest sponsored route? The UK is often the simplest first move.
- Chasing the highest salary and long-term settlement? The USA — but plan for longer timelines.
- Want to save fast, tax-free, sooner? The Gulf.
Whatever you choose, two things start now: keep your NMCN registration current, and begin your qualification verification early.